Yeah the resistors in the switch are wired differently. When you turn the knob it receives a different voltage and selects the appropriate DSP table. These voltages can be changed in the tune.
That being said I know a lot of guys run no limiting at all on their track tunes and I think that's what they're talking about. You can't really turn those off when they have heavy tow tunes on the dsp because smoke and egt would be out of control with a driver that didn't understand feathering throttle until boost comes up...they end up being unhappy.
If you do it the other way around and leave the limiters in there, the fuel is limited until there is sufficient boost and they complain of slower spool on the race tune.
This is why I don't do race DSPs. It's how I do it and I'm sure others do it different. I will make tow/Econ/street dsp's all day long but when someone is serious about track times I go single tune every time.
Sent from my iPhone.
That being said I know a lot of guys run no limiting at all on their track tunes and I think that's what they're talking about. You can't really turn those off when they have heavy tow tunes on the dsp because smoke and egt would be out of control with a driver that didn't understand feathering throttle until boost comes up...they end up being unhappy.
If you do it the other way around and leave the limiters in there, the fuel is limited until there is sufficient boost and they complain of slower spool on the race tune.
This is why I don't do race DSPs. It's how I do it and I'm sure others do it different. I will make tow/Econ/street dsp's all day long but when someone is serious about track times I go single tune every time.
Sent from my iPhone.